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Synonyms for ores


Grammar : Noun
Spell : awr, ohr
Phonetic Transcription : ɔr, oʊr

Top 10 synonyms for ores Other synonyms for the word ores

Définition of ores

Origin :
  • 12c., merger of Old English ora "ore, unworked metal" (related to ear "earth," cognate with Low German ur "iron-containing ore," Dutch oer, Old Norse aurr "gravel"); and Old English ar "brass, copper, bronze," from Proto-Germanic *ajiz- (cf. Old Norse eir "brass, copper," German ehern "brazen," Gothic aiz "bronze"), from PIE *aus- "gold" (see aureate). The two words were not fully assimilated till 17c.; what emerged has the form of ar but the meaning of ora.
  • noun mineral
  • noun metallic mineral
Example sentences :
  • This will happen to all of your Earth unless the ores are given us.
  • Extract from : « Raiders of the Universes » by Donald Wandrei
  • The ores were very generally decomposed to a depth of about 300 feet.
  • Extract from : « Mexico » by Charles Reginald Enock
  • Other ores are converted into oxides and reduced by heating with carbon.
  • Extract from : « An Elementary Study of Chemistry » by William McPherson
  • The process of extracting a metal from its ores is called the metallurgy of the metal.
  • Extract from : « An Elementary Study of Chemistry » by William McPherson
  • But the greater mass of the ores we melt have a far less produce than this.
  • Extract from : « Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, No. 458 » by Various
  • Most of the ores obtained in Pennsylvania and New York are magnetite.
  • Extract from : « Commercial Geography » by Jacques W. Redway
  • For this purpose they compete with the ores of Spain and Cuba.
  • Extract from : « Commercial Geography » by Jacques W. Redway
  • Some ores smelt and flow so easily that a flux is not required.
  • Extract from : « Commercial Geography » by Jacques W. Redway
  • Its origin is referred to in connection with the Goldfield ores (p. 230).
  • Extract from : « The Economic Aspect of Geology » by C. K. Leith
  • In Brazil, the ores have undergone close folding and anamorphism.
  • Extract from : « The Economic Aspect of Geology » by C. K. Leith
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